The searches of unidentified Fermi gamma-ray sources (FermiAssoc) published its results in papers published from 2011 to 2021 with a total of 107 new pulsars discovered. It detected a grand total of 31 pulsars. The fastest pulsar discovered was J1803+1358 with a period of 1.52 milliseconds and the slowest pulsar was J1736-3422 with a period of 347.222 milliseconds.
The smallest pulsar dispersion measure was J0307+7443 with a DM of 6.35 pc/cc and the largest pulsar dispersion measure was J2030+3641 with a DM of 246.0 pc/cc. There were a total of 1984 pulsars known before the first discovery was published. This survey increased the total amount of known pulsars by 5.0%.
There were 17 papers written about the discoveries of this survey: Three Millisecond Pulsars in Fermi LAT Unassociated Bright Sources, Discovery of millisecond pulsars in radio searches of southern Fermi Large Area Telescope sources, 350-MHz GBT Survey of 50 Faint Fermi γ-ray Sources for Radio Millisecond Pulsars, PSR J2030+3641: Radio Discovery and Gamma-Ray Study of a Middle-aged Pulsar in the Now Identified Fermi-LAT Source 1FGL J2030.0+3641, Discovery of the millisecond pulsar PSR J2043+1711 in a Fermi source with the Nançay Radio Telescope, Five New Millisecond Pulsars from a Radio Survey of 14 Unidentified Fermi-LAT Gamma-Ray Sources, Pulsar searches of Fermi unassociated sources with the Effelsberg telescope, Gamma-Ray Timing of Redback PSR J2339-0533: Hints for Gravitational Quadrupole Moment Changes, Six New Millisecond Pulsars from Arecibo Searches of Fermi Gamma-Ray Sources, Searching for new millisecond pulsars with the GBT in Fermi unassociated sources, Enabling pulsar and fast transient searches using coherent dedispersion, An image-based search for pulsars among Fermi unassociated LAT sources, FAST's Discovery of a New Millisecond Pulsar (MSP) toward the Fermi-LAT unassociated source 3FGL J0318.1+0252, Probably Approximately Correct Explanations of Machine Learning Models via Syntax-Guided Synthesis, Discovery and Timing of Three Millisecond Pulsars in Radio and Gamma-Rays with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope and Fermi Large Area Telescope, Discovery of eleven millisecond pulsars using jerk searches on unassociated Fermi-LAT sources, Constraining dark matter microphysics with the annihilation signal from subhalos.